All the Great Hits Diana Ross Cover Art Itunes

  • Pamela Anderson razzle dazzles 'em in Chicago on Broadway

    The 'Baywatch' star's musical skills are a piece of work in progress, just her acting is surprisingly practiced and she's certainly pulling the crowds

    Pamela Anderson during the first-night curtain call for her Broadway debut in 'Chicago'
  • Noughts + Crosses, series 2, review: a drama designed to provoke classroom fence

    This fast-paced adaptation of Malorie Blackman's novels will get immature people thinking, only the plots are muddled and the dialogue is wooden

  • Britain'south civilised tolerance of 2d World War conscientious objectors should brand us all proud

    Tobias Kelly'southward book Battles of Conscience reminds us that Uk was nearly solitary in enshrining in law the correct to refuse military duty

  • Barry Humphries live: the irreverent one-time wizard of Oz remains a wonder, possums

    This 'audience with' isn't the revelation is promises to exist, but an evening with the man behind Dame Edna Everage is still non to be missed

  • Maud Martha review: an American classic finally lands in the Britain – 7 decades tardily

    Finally out in the United kingdom, Gwendolyn Brooks'southward 1953 novel follows a woman whose skin colour becomes a wall between herself and her lover

Comment and analysis

  • GB News should beware – TalkTV is another shark in the same pond

    Two channels are chasing the same viewers – and then is Nigel Farage's operation in trouble? The probable upshot is far from that simple

    High-profile: Donald Trump is interviewed by Piers Morgan for TalkTV
  • How Alan Dein is connecting strangers to brand the nearly electrifying radio

    A new serial of Alan Dein's Don't Log Off explores the things that enliven and inspire people all around the world

    Alan Dein, presenter of the Radio 4's Don't Log Off
  • How Orwell'south stab at socialist propaganda ended up equally an attack on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

    Start published in 1937, The Road to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists detest it?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell
  • Victoria Coren Mitchell in Brain Reaction

Reviews

  • Prima Facie, review: Jodie Comer's vivid W Terminate debut is like a punch to the guts

    This solo piece at the Harold Pinter, in which Comer plays a lawyer who is raped, reveals the the Killing Eve star as a natural on stage too

    Jodie Comer in Prima Facie
  • Alan Partridge: Stratagem: the kind of show Partridge himself would devise

    Thirteen years since he last brought the hapless presenter to the stage, Steve Coogan is back – with mixed but at times irresistible results

    Steve Coogan and Emma Sidi in Stratagem
  • Jeremy Corbyn lost. Why can't the Left accept this?

    Oliver Eagleton'south sneering biography of the Labour leader, The Starmer Project, is laced with bitterness and clouded by bias

    Leader of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer
  • Frederick Ashton triple bill: a lyrical assault course for the Imperial Ballet'south rising stars

    The genius choreographer's steps are notoriously hard to main, simply this cute programme saw the company's younger dancers undaunted

    A crisp musicality: Francesca Hayward and Cesar Corrales in Rhapsody
  • Debbie Harry performing on stage at The O2 Arena
  • Brexit, a conspiracy hatched by public schoolboys in 1980s Oxford? Pull the other one

    Simon Kuper'south Chums argues that our political moment was all a university stitch-upwardly – only it reads like an out-of-touch on, 231-page whinge

    'King of all he surveyed': Boris Johnson as President of the Oxford Union with the Greek minister for culture Melina Mercouri

Behind the music

Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight'due south Television set

  • What's on TV this night: Searching for Michael Jackson's Zoo with Ross Kemp, Inside No 9 and more

    Your complete guide to the week's goggle box, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular serial telling the stories behind moving picture and TV'southward greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • Jeremy Corbyn lost. Why tin't the Left accept this?

    Oliver Eagleton's sneering biography of the Labour leader, The Starmer Project, is laced with bitterness and clouded by bias

    Leader of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer
  • Does Elon Musk really understand the books he claims inspired him?

    The billionaire says he'due south 'a utopian anarchist of the kind described by Iain M Banks' – only what of Banks's socialist and anti-wealth views?

    Billionaire entrepreneur, investor, and business magnate Elon Musk
  • Film To Kill a Mockingbird Gregory Peck
  • Brexit, a conspiracy hatched past public schoolboys in 1980s Oxford? Pull the other one

    Simon Kuper's Chums argues that our political moment was all a university stitch-upward – simply it reads like an out-of-bear upon, 231-page whinge

    'King of all he surveyed': Boris Johnson as President of the Oxford Union with the Greek minister for culture Melina Mercouri
  • Why the 1990s were the last golden age of culture

    Alee of a BBC season, our critics prove that the happiest decade made the best fine art

    Cool Britannia: (from left) Jarvis Cocker of Pulp, Tracey Emin, David Baddiel and Rob Newman
  • The Tate'due south Walter Sickert show is a foggy panorama of Victorian dirt and vice

    Tate Uk's exhibition is saturated with also many similar paintings and misses an opportunity to explore Sickert's acting

    The Camden Town Murder (c1908) by Walter Sickert
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

    The native people of the Arctic Circle are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the dried males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the art extravaganza pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'

In depth

More stories

  • Prima Facie, review: Jodie Comer's brilliant West Terminate debut is like a dial to the guts

    This solo slice at the Harold Pinter, in which Comer plays a lawyer who is raped, reveals the the Killing Eve star every bit a natural on stage too

    Jodie Comer in Prima Facie
  • Searching for Michael Jackson'southward Zoo, review: Ross Kemp reveals the truthful horrors of Neverland

    The quondam EastEnders role player excels in request difficult questions about uncomfortable subjects

    Ross Kemp with elephant trainer Josh and Baba the elephant
  • Alan Partridge: Stratagem: the kind of show Partridge himself would devise

    Thirteen years since he last brought the hapless presenter to the stage, Steve Coogan is back – with mixed but at times irresistible results

    Steve Coogan and Emma Sidi in Stratagem
  • Jeremy Corbyn lost. Why can't the Left accept this?

    Oliver Eagleton's sneering biography of the Labour leader, The Starmer Project, is laced with bitterness and clouded by bias

    Leader of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer
  • 'It's possible she was assassinated': Joyce Ballad Oates on Marilyn Monroe

    As her novel Blonde gets the Hollywood handling, Oates unmasks the real Monroe

    'Marilyn Monroe was a performance – by a woman called Norma Jeane Baker': the actress in 1946
  • DJ Tim Westwood steps downward from radio testify later on sexual misconduct allegations

    British hip-hop DJ volition no longer present his Capital Xtra prove 'until further find' following the claims made by several women

    Tim Westwood
  • Frederick Ashton triple nib: a lyrical set on course for the Royal Ballet's ascension stars

    The genius choreographer's steps are notoriously hard to master, only this beautiful programme saw the company's younger dancers undaunted

    A crisp musicality: Francesca Hayward and Cesar Corrales in Rhapsody
  • Does Elon Musk really empathise the books he claims inspired him?

    The billionaire says he's 'a utopian anarchist of the kind described by Iain M Banks' – merely what of Banks'due south socialist and anti-wealth views?

    Billionaire entrepreneur, investor, and business magnate Elon Musk

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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